Sentences with metropolitan
met·ro·pol·i·tan
M m - ...the metropolitan district of Miami.
- ...the Ukrainian Catholic representatives, Metropolitan Volodymyr and Bishop Sofron.
- The French considered Algeria to be part of metropolitan France, not a colony, and over a million French citizens lived there.
- The military also was used increasingly in domestic law enforcement, even extending to a regular military presence in high-crime areas of major metropolitan cities.
- The metropolitan area
- metropolitan France
- Archbishop David Crawley, metropolitan of British Columbia and the Yukon, said that two cases were about to come before the Supreme Court in British Columbia.
- I grabbed his hand, bowed low, and kissed the great ring of the archbishop of Chicago, metropolitan of Illinois, and cardinal priest of the Roman Catholic Church.
- The New York metropolitan area.
- The options for this include picking specific cities, metropolitan areas, or even a distance radius from a specific point.
- Such a letter is calculated to mislead, purposely or otherwise, those who are not familiar with Bradford City or its metropolitan area.
- In the Catholic Church, metropolitan priests generally outnumber Antillean.
- Serving larger school districts in metropolitan areas can also require careful logistical planning for deliveries.
- The metropolitan grouping reflects urban areas and a fully functioning tiered health care system with ready access to tertiary care.
- For decades, center cities of metropolitan areas were regarded as the growth engines of their suburbs.
- Water restrictions were imposed on Saturday in the metropolitan area and in towns and properties fed by the Goldfields pipeline.
- Lewis in terms of his art was a metropolitan in search of the visceral and his analysis of the life force was forensic in its intensity.
- Several studies have found that violent crime is higher in American metropolitan areas where the distribution of income is more unequal.
- Two hundred surveys also were sent to people randomly selected from the Internet, from small rural areas to large metropolitan cities.
- By the 5th cent. ad the title was applied to the occupants of sees of major ecclesiastical importance, particularly those of metropolitan bishops.
- Print and framing shops can be found in every mall, many strip shopping centers, and tucked away in old city shopping areas in every metropolitan community in America.
- And whereas, its decision made, the Assembly passed on to pressing metropolitan business, the impact on the colony itself was volcanic.
- Algeria had been conquered in 1830 and transformed into a French colony administered as if it were metropolitan France.
- Both the core city and the surrounding metropolitan area lost population in the 2000 census.
- Kansas City is a metropolitan area with very clear racial dividing lines.
- The new prosperity of the cities made the metropolitan bishops significant figures in art patronage in the 13th and 14th centuries.
- A number of overseas possessions remain part of metropolitan France and send MPs to the national assembly.
- Yet the change is not happening evenly and is much more apparent and much more rapid in cities, especially in metropolitan areas and on the two coasts.
- I understand that this Index works best in smaller towns and more rural areas away from metropolitan conurbations.
- Towns in metropolitan areas, however, have been able to take advantage of this by consolidating their authority over discrete services.
- But yesterday, in a stroke, a perhaps equivalent population was subtracted from the city and the metropolitan area.
- A patriarchal election council chose metropolitan bishop Kiril of Plovdiv for Bulgarian patriarch.
- In monarchies and in democracies, in metropolitan Europe as well as in colonial South Asia, the state management of forests has met bitter and continuous opposition.
- In some cases the laws were enacted by the local society, including resident slaveowners; in others it was imposed by the metropolitan government to control slavery in distant colonies.
- While bureaucracy and inertia ruled in metropolitan France, service in the colonies offered challenge and responsibility, providing a shaft of light which helped illuminate the army even in its darkest days.